Sperm donor anonymity case opens in B.C. Appeal Court
B.C. Supreme Court ruled that B.C. law not in accord with Charter of Rights
CBC News
Posted: Feb 14, 2012 9:25 AM ET
Last Updated: Feb 14, 2012 3:06 PM ET
Olivia Pratten says she believes the B.C. government is stalling for time over its requirement to rewrite the provincial law governing sperm donor anonymity. (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)
Related
The controversial issue of the anonymity of sperm donors is before the B.C. Court of Appeal on Tuesday.
The provincial government is appealing a lower court ruling last year that struck down the law protecting the identity of donors.
The issue was initially brought before the B.C. Supreme Court by Olivia Pratten — born in 1982 — who wanted to learn more about the identity of her biological father.
At the previous hearing, Pratten testified that the Vancouver doctor who performed the artificial insemination of Pratten's mother told her only that her father was a stocky, Caucasian medical student with blue eyes, brown hair, and type-A blood.
The doctor also told Pratten, 29, who is an editor with Thomson Reuters, that the sperm donor records had been legally destroyed.
The court ruled in Pratten's favour in May 2011, saying that the law protecting sperm donors’ anonymity discriminated against the rights of the children born by artificial insemination.
Pratten said she's disappointed the B.C. government is appealing the ruling, but she isn't surprised.
“I’ve been told it will probably go to the Supreme Court of Canada and I knew when I got involved with this,” Pratten told CBC News. “But it was disappointing.”
The court also told the province it had to rewrite the law within 15 months to bring it in line with the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
Pratten suspects the government is stalling for time.
“Bureaucracy doesn’t like to move fast. This is a delaying tactic,” she said.
The appeal is scheduled to last two days.
With files from the CBC's Ben HadawayShare Tools
Top News Headlines
- CP Rail union, Tories battle over collective bargaining
- The federal Conservatives defended their plan to force striking Canadian Pacific Railway employees back to work as a way to keep the economy on track, while the union representing 4,800 workers said their collective bargaining rights are under attack. more »
- Missing Winnipeg kids found in Mexico back with mom

- Two Winnipeg children who had been missing for nearly four years are back home, reunited with their mother, after they were located in Mexico late last week. more »
- Bullyproof: One classroom confession
- Chadia became physically scarred after incessant teasing. Her story is one of 150 gathered in a video confessional booth at a Quebec school. more »
- Hesjedal knew Giro win was no sure thing

- Victoria cyclist Ryder Hesjedal says his Giro d'Italia victory was never a sure thing, despite being the favourite going into the final stage of the three-week race. more »
Latest Health News Headlines
- 5 ways to prevent kids from getting poisoned
- Poison centres across Canada field about 160,000 calls a year about children exposed to medications and other household chemicals more »
- Dementia patients may not imagine their future
- Our ability to imagine our future depends on a part of the brain used to store general knowledge, which is affected by some forms of dementia. more »
- Eastern Health to cut hundreds of jobs, Liberals say
- Health Minister Susan Sullivan says spending cuts at the province's largest health authority will not hurt programs and services, despite a claim by the Opposition Liberals. more »
- Ontario knocked for special-needs student support
- The province should conduct a review of how it serves special-needs students and improve a policy to support connections between schools and the community, a new report urges. more »
FEATURED HEALTH
- Missing Winnipeg kids found in Mexico back with mom
- Canadian Everest climber's body recovered
- Thunder Bay flooding causes state of emergency
- Air Canada jet makes emergency landing in Toronto
- Vatican denies cardinal suspected in leaks scandal
- Evolution skeptics will soon be silenced by science: Richard Leakey
- CP Rail union, Tories battle over collective bargaining
- Remains found in bag on Cape Breton river ID'd
- Justin Bieber wanted for questioning in L.A. scuffle

